Nautilus

How Swarming Insects Act Like Fluids

Reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine’s Abstractions blog.

By studying a swarm of flying midges as though it were a fluid, physicists have learned how collective behaviors might stabilize a group against environmental disruptions.Photograph by Hans / Pixabay

Starlings take to the sky in swirling vortices; ants teem like rivers. “They stretch, they move around, but they retain cohesion in a way you’d expect from a fluid moving,” said Nicholas Ouellette, a physicist at Stanford University. That’s why to him, it isn’t far-fetched to think about collective animal behavior in the language of fluid mechanics, or to analyze groups of organisms much as an engineer would analyze a material.

That approach has paid off in a  in which Ouellette and his colleagues

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